Canada’s Investments in Social Programs Now Rank Near the Bottom of the Industrialized World

Nevermind what the Fraser Institute and other right-wing groups will tell you, Canada is actually underfunding social programs by a significant amount compared to other industrialized countries around the world.

According to a new OECD study looking at how much countries spend on services, benefits and tax breaks related to healthcare, families, old age security, unemployment, housing and more, Canada’s public social expenditures fall well below the OECD average – even lower than the United States.

Using the latest data available, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development calculates Canada’s public spending on social programs is equal to 17.2% of GDP, placing Canada well below the OECD average (21%) and ranking Canada in the bottom 10 of all 35 industrialized OECD countries.

That’s almost half of what top countries like France (31.5%), Finland (30.8%) and Belgium (29%) invest in social programs and stands in sharp contrast with major economies like Germany (25.3%), the United Kingdom (21.5%) and the United States (19.3%).

Commenting on how Canadians’ perceptions of our healthcare system are often skewed by how good we think we look in comparison to the United States, the Globe and Mail’s André Picard points to other studies that reached the same conclusion:

“Canada spends US$4,641 per capita on health, or 10.3 per cent of gross domestic product. That ranks 7 among 11 countries. If you look at public spending alone, it’s 7.4 per cent of GDP; even the United States spends more on health from public coffers, 8.3 per cent of GDP.

The notion that health spending is out of control and gobbling up too much of our tax dollars simply does not hold up to international scrutiny.”

Picard adds that healthcare isn’t the only area where the actual level of public investment lags far behind the popular perception.

In fact, another recent paper published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal suggests that Canada has “systematically under-invested in social programs over the past three decades.”

“What is more shocking, though, is how comparatively little Canada spends on social programs – 13 per cent of GDP, dead last. Denmark, by contrast, spends 27 per cent on social programs; even the hard-hearted U.S spends more, 16.7 per cent.” pic.twitter.com/StemQxOpZl

A letter signed by more than 70 recipients of a prestigious University of Toronto student leadership award is demanding the University “rescind” an award granted to disgraced ex-Rebel Media host Faith Goldy due to her role within the alt-right “white nationalist movement.”

The letter obtained by PressProgress is addressed to the University’s Alumni Association and demands they immediately “rescind Ms. Goldy-Bazos’ Gordon Cressy Award.”

“We are grateful to have been recognized by the Alumni Association and are proud to be among such a distinguished…